CLERMONT -- If the Bullitt County Education Development Authority hopes to see a beautiful college campus on its property off Interstate 65, it will apparently be with a different suitor.
For the past two years, the local group has been working with a prospective tenant to locate a place of higher education on county property at the intersection of I-65 and Highway 245.
Drawings were rendered and hopes were raised.

HEBRON ESTATES -- Motorists are adjusting to the new traffic patterns in northern Bullitt County.
Officials with the Hebron Estates City Commission spent a great portion of a short meeting talking about the newly-opened sections of Preston Highway.
Pioneer Village police chief D.J. Reynolds said the new road had presented problems with numerous accidents.
The hope was that as motorists become more familiar with the road, the accidents would decrease.
For residents of Hebron Estates, the road has brought frustration over the traffic signal operations.

FRANKFORT--Due to the potential for flooding and the outlook for another round of winter weather to affect Kentucky Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, the Tornado Drill has been rescheduled for Tuesday, March 10.

SHEPHERDSVILLE -- Darrell Vincent recognized last year that when his high school students arrived later due to a two-hour weather delay, they acted differently.
There was more interest and more energy.
He knew that with a little more sleep, his students were better prepared to start learning when the bell rang.
And there is plenty of research nationwide about the advantages of having high school students starting classes later in the morning.
However, the mission given a committee to study the start times of Bullitt County students is not a simple one.

Eyesores have caused headaches for the Lebanon Junction city council. At a recent council meeting,
council member Connie Jackson ask if they could be more diligent in enforcing that people clean up trash and other waste in their yards.
“If they're elderly we can get a youth group to help clean it up,” she said.
Jackson also mentioned they needed an ordinance relating to dilapidated buildings. She said there are a couple of garages in town that look like “they would fall over if you touched them.”
“There's no pride in town anymore. We're not going to grow if people don't try,” she said.